TRUCKERS' HEALTH * USA - Truckers with Obstructive Sleep Apnea May Be Required To Undergo Treatment Prior To Issue Of Certification
An effort to curb drowsiness among truck drivers could gain ground next month when the federal agency that regulates truckers acts on medical findings regarding a sleep disorder
McLean,VA,USA -USA TODAY, by Larry Copeland -26 March 2008: -- ... The medical review board of the Federal Motor Carrier Safety Administration will finalize recommendations about truckers and obstructive sleep apnea (OSA) on April 7, says Maggi Gunnels, the agency's director of medical programs... People who have the condition wake up frequently during sleep because the disorder causes their airways to partially close. The constant awakening, once every minute or two in severe cases, makes them unusually drowsy during their waking periods. That could be especially risky for drivers of big rigs... Clinical studies have shown that commercial truck drivers have a higher incidence of the most severe form of OSA — 20%-30%, compared with 2% of women over age 40 and 4% of men over 40, says David Rapoport, medical director of the New York University School of Medicine Sleep Disorders Center... The federal agency's guidelines on truckers and sleep apnea need an update based on improved science and the medical community's better understanding of the condition, says Dave Osiecki, vice president of safety, security and operations at the American Trucking Associations, which represents trucking companies...
* Obesity may drive some truckers to doze
McLean,VA,USA -USA TODAY, by Larry Copeland -26 March 2008: -- ... A major contributor to the condition is obesity, says Allan Pack, director of the Center for Sleep and Respiratory Neurobiology at the University of Pennsylvania and adviser to the medical review board. The board is expected to recommend that commercial truckers be required to undergo a sleep study once they reach a certain level of obesity... If the agency approves, drivers would have to be treated for the condition to get certified. Treatment can include surgery or the use of a mask during sleep that delivers air into the airway... Gunnels and Pack say review board members were split over what level of obesity should trigger the sleep study requirement... Gunnels says federal regulators already can ground drivers they believe are susceptible to drowsiness; the changes, if implemented, would give them more authority... "Individually, trucking companies are becoming more aware of this issue and are screening truck drivers, but there's also a role the federal government can and should play," he says... The Owner-Operator Independent Drivers Association, which represents small-business and independent truckers, would oppose testing drivers for sleep apnea based solely on their weight unless a "direct causal relationship" with obesity can be shown, says Tom Weakley, director of operations for the OOIDA Foundation... (Photos from: 9news.com)
Labels: Truckers' Health
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